RESUMO
We demonstrate nonlinear temporal compression of a vortex beam by propagation in a gas-filled capillary. Starting from an ytterbium-based laser delivering 700 µJ 640 fs pulses at a 100 kHz repetition rate, the vortex beam is generated using a spiral phase plate and coupled to a capillary where it excites a set of four modes that have an overlap integral of 97% with a Laguerre-Gauss LG10 mode. Nonlinear propagation of this hybrid, orbital angular momentum (OAM)-carrying mode results in temporal compression down to 74 fs at the output. Beam and pulse characterizations are carried out to determine the spatial profile and temporal duration of compressed pulses. This result in multimode nonlinear optics paves the way towards the generation of OAM-carrying few-cycle pulses, isolated attosecond XUV pulses, and tunable UV pulses through resonant dispersive wave emission.
RESUMO
This Letter describes an experimental realization of a double-pass amplifier using rod-type fiber. In this device, the gain reaches 26 dB amplifying a 300 mW, 20 ps, 20 MHz seed up to 120 W, with an optical-to-optical efficiency of 50% and excellent beam quality. In addition, by design the output of the amplifier has a polarization extinction ratio of 33 dB. Besides these good performances, we report a marginal degradation of mode quality and degree of polarization followed by the so-called transverse mode instability which occurs at 120 W signal power. The first degradation is static, and by analyzing its two polarizations, we conclude it is caused by a coupling between modes due to the formation of a static thermal long-period grating, which in turn initiates the dynamic instability.
RESUMO
By pumping thulium-doped silica-based fibers at 1.07 µm, rapid generation of absorbing centers leads to photoinduced attenuation (PIA). This detrimental effect prevents exploiting laser emissions in the visible and near infrared. We report on the characterization of the PIA versus the fiber core composition, particularly the concentration of thulium (Tm), lanthanum (La), and cerium (Ce) ions. We show that UV emission induced by Tm-Tm energy transfers is the source of photodarkening and that lanthanum and cerium are efficient hardeners against PIA.